Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1944 — Page 19

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MOrrow A; : aie

5 weeks ago,

league team,

The International loop champs outdrew six American league clubs and five in the National league. . ., Latshaw, former Cali-

fornian who now makes his home played to 626,000 fans this season.

was destroyed by fire, we had drawn only 100,000 people. “Then we moved to Baltimore's huge municipal stadium and

drew 526,000 more. This included

little world series games with Louisville of the American association. “Our old park seated 12,000. People stayed away from the old figured they would not find seats if they came * » »

Place because they late.” . :

Visiting Clubs Collected In

A SERIES in Baltinicre, after the Orioles moved to ‘the city stadium was a bonanza for visiting clubs, said Latshaw. . ., He added, “First division clubs collected $9000 for their cut of a fourgame series, We averaged between 12,000 and 15,000 every night

at home.

“Our playoff series with Newark, the second place team, drew 168,000 for four games. Newark p

games at home, y:- 0 » 2 “The fans went wild over our Howard Moss, ‘an outfielder, had a “A brewery there paid us for

in the regular home season, six in the two playoff series and one in the little world series. His income

$1100 and $1200.”

Orioles Had Punch and Pitching THE ORIOLES were a great club, according to Latshaw, one

of the key men. . of several on the team who batted

Six star hurlers, said Bob, all better

Wilson. |

“We couldn't figure ont ‘why Wilson wad such a star in the American association this year,” said Latshaw. “Any one of our first division clubs was much better than Louisville. Newark had & big league pitching staff until the New

and Bevens for thé stretch drive.

"OUR ace was Red Embree, who could have been a& consistent year. He won 19 games and lost 11 in of the defeats were handed him by Buffalo,

sluggers. Red won two games from Louisville in the junior work series.

winner in the majors this the regular season. Six Which had a great collection of

“Embree belongs to Cleveland.

Indians would recall him in the thick of

for’us, they didn't.”

Caps Out on Road for Two Games AFTER two days of idleness, the

Teturn to limelight tonight Hershey and Providence

when

performs

Providence at Cleveland, The ‘Sunday ice menu

Younee, Oregon Policeman, Seeks Title of No. 1 Pro Kicker

CHICAGO, Oct. 25 man has kicked the in football and as a eastern division championship

and National league statistics showed today that the 210-pound, blond-haired giant is on his way towards replacing Sammy Baugh as the No. 1 professional punt artist. Younce, who is a Salem peace officer during the off-season, was an All-Coast performer and the outstanding lineman of the year while an Oregon State guard in 1041. He currently Mis leading professional kickers with a 429 average while his longest kick was for 72 yards as the!

Giants defeated Brooklyn, 14-7, two!

Faces Test In Eagles

BOB LATSHAW, former Indianapolis first sacker who helped win the 1944 International league pennant, the I, L. playoff and the little world series, says. the Oriole city might be ‘called fertile ground for a big

+ + The former Indianapolis first sacker was one

St, Louis and on Sa §ames, with Indianapolis at Pittsburgh, Buffalo

: calls for Pittsburgh at Indianapglis, Cleveland at Buffalo and Hershey

(U.P). ~The heavy foot of a Salem, Ofte, moth balls off one of the result is booting the New York Giants towards the

of the National Football league. Len Younce, the Giants’ kicking guard, has boy play in New York Coach Steve Owen

{ play only part-time while Younce is

jsll-around halfback who has a 35.8

The undefeated Philadelphia

Eagles will supply the acid test for! .. Rushi 1 Younce's toe Sunday when they play! 4 ny va A New York, eastern division leader | Sinkwicn, Detroit :..... 7 248 37 With their straight victories, for first | Sena. New hark rs a ae i place.. The Eagles have a pack of Passing swift backs—led by Steve Van| AW. Cmpl. Yd. Pot. Buren, who specialises in lugging a hS 8 “es oh back kicked leather. Colella, Cleveland. 41 18 206 440 . Owen is the league's champion ex- Seatind A ponent of defensive football and a Hutson, Green Bay § 5 rer long-time believer in the punt as one Benton. Cleland. 3. s 0 * of the best weapons to set a team |sinkwicn Derr 3 ; : ! pH

back on its heels. In Younce, Owen has the propellant. ; : One of the most bruising linemen in pro football, Younce promises to kick Baugh off of the punting throne that the Wash Redskin star has held four consecutive years. Baugh, the greatest quick kicker of all time, is scheduled to

A

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GLENMORE DISTILLERIES COMPANY ~~

9 Fi £2 A he Aiwa : RY ; S a eo’ 9 . X 3

B y Eddie Ash

L

it Wisconsin, said, in part: “we Up to July 4, when our old park

our two playoff series and three

2

Big Way

layed only to 100,000 for all its

se =» =» * team. One player in particular, very profitable season. hitting home runs. Moss hit 28

for all these was between

well above 300. ., . Newark had than Louisville's ace, Jim

York Yanks took Queen

We were afraid the Cleveland

the pennant fight. Luckily

American Hockey league: will the Indianapolis Caps play at at Pittsburgh. . .., Pn Priday, there will be three at Hershey and

at Providence,

policeoldest defensive plays

made the punt a major 'S game-winning defensive tactics,

& “must” performer in the Giants’ rock-ribbed line.

Sinkwich Ne. 2 Kicker

The league's No. 2 kicker is Frankie Sinkwich, the Detroit Lions’

average. The former Georgia fireball increased his ground-gaining leadership during the week-end by adding 95 yards for a 288 total, while Don Hutson of Green Bay, although failing to score against Cleveland, held on to his leadership at 48 paints. The offensive leaders,

Buddy Young Put In 1-A Draft Class

CHAMPAIGN, IIL, Oct. 24 (U, P)). — Buddy Young, sensational Unie versity of Illinois halfback who is leading the Big Ten football scorers this season, has been classified 1-A in the draft, his local board said today, Although Young is not likely to be ‘called fof induction before, the close ‘of the football seasor, it is expected that he will not be able to defend his national track titles next spring. ;

chide him be. Bill Alexander

{Service Blow

To 3 Elevens

igan and -Northwestern. :

yesterday.

for Minnesota. ¥ The Wildcats were further weak

back. Michigan Loses Rifenburg .

to await induction.

pearance -for Capt. Bob Wiese

and Bob Nussbaumer,

Nussbaumer from the marines.

South Bend,

halfback and leading scorer, scheduled to receive navy orders tomorrow or Friday.

60,000 May See Irish and Illinois

see the Midwest's top football at-

vs. The ticket sale has climbed to more than 50,000 and university of-

exceed 60000. The heralded duel between Buddy Young, Illinois’ left halfback and national sprint champion, and Bob Kelly, Notre Dame's All-American halfback candidate, has brought requests for newspaper accommodations equal to the record total in 1925 when Red Grange was

| playing his last year.

Although the Irish line overshadows anything Illinois can muster, the Illini's “swish” backs are given

| & good chance to pull an upset.

Illinois’ No. 1 problem is to get its eenters in shape. A needed article to stop the quick-opening thrusts of Fullback Elmer Angsmgn, Halfback Chick Maggioli and Kelly, Illinois’ center manpower has been limited all season and it is doubtful whether first-string George Bujan, converted fullback, will be ready. If not, Emil Tomanek, 196pound freshman, probably will start.

Field Trials Set By Allison Club

The Allison Employees’ Conservation Club, Inc, will hold its fall trials Sunday at Glen's Valley, six miles south of Indianapolis on Road 67. It will be the largest event of its kind in central Indiana this fall. . : Seventy pheasants were released in the trials area Aug. 1 and 40 quail will be released before the trials, assuring numerous finds. The three winners of the amateur all-age stake will be eligible for spring championship trials of the Ifidiana Field Trial association at Versailles. Motion pic tures will be made of the event. Drawings will be made at Alllson's at 7 p. m. Friday. Entries are being received by H, J. Cassidy, 3008, Cold Springs road.

their faded chartreuse jerseys andj soiled yellow pants they're the most disreputable logking football team in the Southland. But the guy who bosses them doesn't care about style, he's only interested in class as a team and they showed plenty of that in the nation’s = higgest upset last week. He's the United Press coach of the week, bluff straight - talking

~ CHICAGO, Oct. 25 (U. P.).—Mid-|™ geason service transfers threw the Midwest football picture sharply out of focus today as they hit three major camps, Notre Dame, Mich-{T 7

Northwestern's oft-beaten Wildcats felt the hardest blow with 12 players scheduled to depart. Eleven Navy V-12 trainees were graduated Nine of them were ordered to report to their stations before the Minnesota game. Nov, 4, while the remaining two, Tackle Earl Crum and End Allen Weirman, are expected to be available

ened by the approaching departure of Jim Meulendyke, freshman full- pe back, who is scheduled to report to the navy air corps before Nov. 4. The major loss to the Navy was Bill Roper, second-string left half-

Michigan, already slated to lose the heart of its backfield, received another jolt with the report that End Dick Rifenburg, freshman pass receiver, will drop out of school after Saturday's game with Purdue

The Purdue game, which brings together the Big Ten's defending co-champions, will be the last ap-

Michigan's high-scoring fullback, halfback. Both have received transfer orders, Wiese from the Navy V-12 and

Notre Dame's hopes for its second consecutive national championship were dimmed with the official report that regular halfback Chick Maggioli, second-string center Art Statuto and second-string halfback George Terlep will be making their last . appearance of the season against Illinois Saturday. Statuto and Terlep are Navy-V-12 students while Maggioli is a member of the marine unit being disbanded at

Bab Kelly, the Irish's ace right is

CHAMPAIGN, Ii, Oct. 25 (U. P.) —More than 50,000 football fans will invade Champaign Saturday to

traction, undefeated Notre Dame Illinois z

ficials said the attendance might

{coaches has a unique phase to his

«

v

SO

Surprise Team

enough to think it may get there.

the same manner that the proached their other upset vi

to date.

“old-fashioned”

ing in the gridiron realm.

_ Boy-Powered Quakers Will Tack

One set of the many Navy backs who are Penns Barron, Dick Duden, Joe Sullivan and Bob Jenkins.

NEW. YORK, Oct. 25 (U. P)~— Pennsylvania's boy - powered Quakers, the surprise team of the eastern football season, will try fo come home against Navy Saturday on a “single wing and a prayer’ and Coach George Munger is optimistic

Penn's assignment against the “bound-to-be-boiling” Navy Middies probably is the least enviable of the day, but Munger and his beardless boys are taking it in stride, much in apries in their unbeaten and untied record

Munger is charged with being by some of the other eastern coaches, because they feel the single wing offensive has been putmoded by the “TIT” formation. That doesn’t bother him in the least, because his version of it is as baffling as any that is operat-

What makes Penn's single wing unique is” that in reality it is | set up with the six-man line rush“doubled bladed.” When the backsi/ing the dickens out of the passer. line up in a single wing to the left,

=

ylvania's problem this week. Left to right: Bill

# £57

of East to Use 01d-Time |

Single Wing Against Formidable Middies

{in 135 in each of his three games. | Pennsylvania

the Quakers have 17-year-old Tony Minisi, the freshman flier, who is a right-handed passer. If the play is a single wing to the right, the ball handler usually is Al Sica, a 19-year-old left-handed passer.

Take the word of Eddie Cameron, whose Duke Blue Devils were upset by Penn, 18-7, that combination “is one of the most baffling to work up a defense against of any I have seen.” However, as far as the scholarly looking Munger is concerned, the chances of upsetting Navy lie not in & forward pass offensive, but in combatting Navy's own passes. Fearful that the Middies may come back with little Hal Hamberg engineering their sharp aerial assault, Munger is working double time to set up a defense that he hopes will stop the Middies like a four-strand barbed wire fence. :

eleven-man proposition,” he said. “The boys are instructed to play the ball at all times, usually in a 6-2-2-1

“The boys get a lot of drilling on

thow to intercept passes and for that |

reason I like basketball players in|

{the backfield, because they know | {how to handle a ball while facing lit, going into and after it. A lot! {of football players apparently never 1 | realize there is a difference between | {receiving a forward, pass and inter- | {cepting one.”

{

| Munger emphasizes that Penn will | {be a definite underdog psychologi- ! ically and physically against Navy, | “but we aren't conceding them a | thing.” “If they fumble or stumble, we | {might take ’em,” he said. “Mean- | {while I'm praying.” The Navy - Penn meeting and | {Army's first big test against Duke ‘highlight a good ‘eastern’ schedule {this week-end. In a Friday game| ‘Temple meets Bucknell, while the rest of the Saturday program in-

| State - West Virginia, Columbia- | Colgate, Syracuse - Boston College, |

of New York and Pittsburgh-Chat-' ham Field, 8. C. On Sunday, Holy Cross plays Coast Guard academy.

asain Indiana ja = “Pass defense on our team is an!cludes Dartmouth - Brown, Penn Robert’ Avels, Riviera” Club .. ...... 877;

New York University - City College |J. Langdon. Des Oren Archer, Tndpis. Bleaching

[Carl Mindach Shoots 699 To Lead West Side Bowling League for 2d Straight Week

Carl Mindach, for the second consecutive week, set a season

vidual total record in the West Side

help his Cook's Goldblume team to of the evening. Runnerup honors in the individual race also went to a West Side leaguer, Maj. Jim Hume getting 206, 222, 247675 for Burford Printing Co. Don White with 224, 269, 174-667 in the Commercial league at FoxHunt and Dave James with 172, 248, 237—657 in the Pennsylvania Recreation loop were other outstanding scorers. White was in action with Lincoln Park - Industries, while James rolled with the BSolataire quintet. ; Dr, A. J. Ullrich, a member of the Tower Studios in Our Lady of Lourdes league, rolling at Pritchett-Hunt-O'Grady alleys, didn't place among the high scorers last night, but he recorded a rare feat. Dr. Ullrich, who averages 135, turned!

OTHER 600 BOWLERS (MEN) Joe Taylor, Pennsylvania Rec. ....,.. 644! Howard Deere Sr., West Side Clagsic.. 637 Wyatt May, Stewsrt-Warner 831 | Wm. Brown, Fun Bow! Social ........ 626 | Joe Newman, Pun Bowl Social........ 624 | Mike Loritza, Commercial 624 Wilbyr Holle, Commercial .. Herman Bohne, West Side Classic

waren brava iN . 623

| Ernest HohivSr,, Blue Ribbon Ice Crm. 623 | Velma Cooney, Blue Ribbon Ice Cresm 3524

Harry Harding, “Our Lady of Lourdes

| Floyd Kenyon, John Hagcock Insur.. 621 Muriel Hayes, Blue Ribbon Ice Cream .

H, A. Dittwiler, Grapho Products Roy Springer, Grotto oA A ee Wm. Pulton Jr., West Side Classic... i Ed Findell, West Side Classic ....... 613| Gene Taylor, Allison Office Mixed.... 613 Jas. Wilson, Fun Bowl Soc ; 610} Ed Ryan, Pennsylvania Reen..,....... 610 | Floyd Miles, West Side Classic........ 609 | Joe Fomasco, John Hancock Insurance 605 | Pred Beiser, West Side Classic 605 | Jas. Johnson, Pun Bow! Social.. ‘ sos | Jerry O'Grady, Our Lady of Lourdes.. 602 ayne Becrest. Cqgmmunity 60 Grubbs, Fun Bowl Social Claude Noggle, Commercial .......... Soi

.. 817] 614 | . 813]

OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (MEN)

Skaggs, Curtiss-Wright Mixed ........ 586 Dennis Lauer, Carter Real Estate .... LH] I, wien a : Schuh, Link-Belt No. 2 . 586 |

i

Emmanual Roth, Chev. Com. Body.... 515] Manny Faddell, Ind, Empl. Sec. Mixed 558 Earl Allen, Mitchell-8cott ............ 556 | Ralph Ittenbaugh, Gyre .............. | elan Reen. .......0... 558 1 (Pkwy.) 346 Mixed 545 Mike Bisesi, R. .C. A. (Dlinoisy ...... 522 Dale Carmichael. R. C. A. 2 (Parkway! 504 Howard Horn, Farm Sec. Adm. Mixed 487

Geo. Longacre, R. C. A. No

undisputed or shared league crown

Athletic conference title. Seek Championship Game

Frankfort to West Lafayette. 4

the “state championship.” He contacted only Gary Emerson

Central, the far

undefeateti . and untied records

ords. No 10-Game Woes

South Bend Washington's

Central,

Bill Alexander of Those Ramblin’ Reckin’ Engineers Is Chosen as ‘Coach of Week’

NEW YORK, Oct. 25 (U. P).~In legend, was attributed strictly to lorig as he is at the helm.

“lady luck" by Alexander. Alexander, who bears a remarkable resemblance to Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, and is running his feam

lieves there is one other victory that stands out even above that hair-raiser over Navy. That was the 1829 Rose bowl thriller when Tech won, 8-7, over California after dropping Roy Riegels in the end zone after his famous “wrong-way” run,

The wily, dean of the southern

Bill Alexander of those ramblin’

cause he doesn't spruce up his team Texas, 14-7, in the Cotton bowl in a little but Alexander, now in ifs] 1943.- y i silver _year as ‘coach of| Alex was born at Mud the team, has a ready answer

anni

| by anyone else for a long time. He

120-18, in this year's Sugar bowl

but has been a “professional Geor-

gian" ever since he was 8 years old hen his family moved to Macon.

record that may be unapproachable

is the only mentor whose teams have been in each of the four msjor bowls. They dropped Missouri, 21-7, in the 1940 Orange bowl, Tulsa,

©

game, and their only loss was to

River, Ky.

Muncie Central Plays Kokomo In One of State’s Top Games

Two of the state's major undefeated high school grid machines, Muncie Central and Vincennes, are in action tonight, topping an attractive mid-week card caused by a two-day school recess enabling teachers to attend state conventions. Muncie's high scoring but relatively untested Bearcats figured to maul Kokomo's twice-defeated, twice~-tied and twice-victorious Wildcats in a North Central conference game that should provide the “clincher” uncie th straight hn _y . .j eight regular -season foes, but it Vincennes, tied twice in six games, | does have a Thanksgiving day game mebts New Albany, one of the] With Evansville Memorial. strongest challengers to Vincennes'|Said' he would not hold his team second ‘straight Southern Indiana | together. more than 10 dass after

Mid-week features sent Terre coach's woes was the fact that his! Haute Gerstmeyer to Brazil, Peru| ‘state championship” game might to Wabash, Bloomington to Linton, prove a dud, as it gid last fall, when Anderson to Richmond, Marshall, | he. challenged the state to provide Ill, against Terre Haute Wiley anda better team than his Bearcats,

Meanwhile, Coach Walter Fisher Memorial, which, in turn, failed to of Muncie Tan ‘into difficulties at- annex state honors as South Bend tempting to arrange a post-season | Washington game which he hoped to bill as for; mythical Hoosier championship.

Emerson, of course, would con- out-of-town patrons and others, clude the l0-game schedule al- many of whom have been comlowed by the Indiana High School | pelled to leave fight clubs before the Athletic association in the event it/end of the main bout because of represents the west N. I. H. S. C. in the division playoffs against| state champions. If Clark, however, wins the Coin flip that would result in case Emerson and the Pioneers tie for. the Western crown, then Emerson would be able to play Muncie|team will play in the Bush-Callahan

in the same victorious manner, be- |.

week on Friday night “Alexander's

|i worried

Evansville Central does not have the 10-game problem, since it plays

Fisher

its final game with New Castle on Nov. 4.

Adding to the Wily Muncie

then lost a decision to Evansville

was conceded the

Fix 10 P. M. Deadline!

co-leader with Hammond Clark in| . the Northern Indiana conference's FOr Philly Bouts western division, and Evansville South's leading eleven, since they and Muncie age| ~Chalrmm Lean Ix Rains of the the three major prep elevens with Pennsylvania tic commission yesterday announced that a new Fisher said he would not play a ruling of the commission, setting 10 post-season game unless his team O'clock, as the starting time for and the opponents had perfect rec-|Windup bouts of all boxing shows,

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 25 (U.P).

will go into effect next Monday. Rains said the ruling was for the convenience of war workers,

{the late starting times.

Colas to Practice

The R. C. Cola amateur basketball pean will practice tomorrow night at the South Side Turners’ gym. The

ICity léague on Friday nights.

“That guy could win football games against tough college teams if he had nothing but 15-year-olds playing for him,” Miller said. Many a Georgia Tech victory has ‘been scored on plays so deceptive that even seasoned press-box observers didn't know who had the ball and how he got it. Alexander goes for tricky reverses, end-arounds and passes, He likes golf, an occasional sip of sherry, and good books, but not by women. That gets him in hot water with his three step-daughters and his sister, Elizabeth Alexander, a New York short-story writer. One of his daughters is Marie Scott, now on leave from the United Press at Atlanta, and another is Rebekah Scott, who recently won a writing award by Washington seminary of Atlanta. 5 * Although a lot of bow! committees are giving Tech top consideration for a post-season game, Alexander isn’t concerned beyond whatever game the Engineers play hext. This

years, will report for induction in

Lipscomb Is Loser

To Farmer Jones

Approximately 2800 tussling fans attended the weekly wrestling program last night at the Armory to see Farmer Jones, the barefoot hillbilly grappler from the hills of Arkansas, score a three-fall triumph’ over Buck Lipscomb, of Indianapolis, in the featured bout. Jones surprised the crowd and also the local product by grabbing the first fall in seven seconds flat when Lipscomb rushed from his corner at the opening bell only to be caught in the chest with a “mule kick.” The Indianapolis matman evened matters in 13 minutes with an airplane spin, but dropped the third session in 12 minutes with a cradle, Tex Hager, Eugene, Ore, won semi-final honors by pinning Nick Billins, of Birmingham, a last-min-ute substitute for Red Dawson, in 15 minutes with a flying head scissors and Rene LaBelle, Toronto, Canada, took the opener over Gorilla Poggi of Argentina, with a leg Nelson in 15 minutes.

Jeff of Lafayette Beats Attucks, 33-6

Jefferson high school of Lafayette smothered Crispus Attucks, '33-6. before 2500 fans at the Jeff field last night. The winners scored three times in| the first half and twice in the second. Williams scored the only At-

Tech Reserves Win

feated the Cathedral reserves, 6-0, | at the East Siders’ field yesterday.! Ed Wiltsee scored the only touch-| down on a 30-yard run,

Eagles Paying Cash Bonuses

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 25 (U. P.).—The ' Philadeiphia Eagles, touted as the power of the National Professional Football league's eastern division, have installed a cash bonus system to spur their players to greater heights, club officials said today. The club spokesman said that Eagle players receive $10 for a tackle inside the rival 20-yard line, $5 for a pass interception and $10 for a pass interception from which the Eagles score without surrendering the ball, $10 for a blocked kick, and $5 for everyplayer in the game at the time for each runback of a punt or kickoff for a touchdown. The management paid out $95 following Sunday’s victory over the Boston Yanks. Steven Van Buren hit the jackpot with a 55yard touchdown return of a punt.

The Tech high school reserves de-

result took city-wide solo honors for the evening. Firing games of 225, 244, 230 he halted one pin short of the ¢imark, but the 699 was enough to

622 Jane Wulsen, Beck Coal & Coke ..... #31 Me Flo Denny, Marott Shoe ............., ss

2 | Clara Mendenhall, Marott Shoe .

. Marjorie Hawks, Marott Shoe

Classic league last night and as create the West Side record xo a 2943 series, the best team

Another feminine pastimer added her name to the long list of 600 shooters. Laverne Biers turned the trick for the first time this season and 1t raised the total 600s fn female competition during the sed-. son to 23. She had 202, 211, 100 603 for Solataire in the H & H Service circuit at the West Side. | Seven ' other women ' leaguers passed the 550 mark, four of them members of the Marott Shoe rolling at Pritchett’s. Julia Lang ] 598, Mary Baringer 577, Mary Baas 563, and Ruth Deer 561 in the Shoe league, while Pearl Tucker had 58 in the Antlers loop; Icel Pullmer 560 in the Blue Ribbon Ice Cream at Sport Bowl and Patty Striebeck 551 in the Falls City Beer at the

OTHER 360 BOWLERS (WOMEN) Flossie Haufler, Broad Ripple

Phyllis Beyer, H. & H. Service ....... a3 Plorence Friedman, Marott Shoe Alice Radheck, Marott Shoe ......... Ruth Reckley, Blue Ribbon Ice Cream Margaret Ray, Blue Ribbon Ice Crm.

L 6c 81 Ba Jo Ostheimer, Marott Shoe ........... $37 Frances Boitz, Blue Ribbon Ice Cream 327

Eleanor Mitchell, Marott Shoe Alma Merrick, Marott Shoe .......... Margaret Moran, Falls City Beer Vi Maltsberger, Marott Shoe

“Skeets” Ebert, Marott Shoe .... ‘ Daisy &tuart, Marott Shoe .........,.. Virginia Cummings, Marott Shoe ..... 3 Bonnie McGrath, Ind. Emp. Sec. Mixed Catherine Adkins, Curtt.-Wright Mixed Kaye Gabel, Marott Shoe Jaskell Bryant, H & H Service...

Fannie Cable, Falls City Beer A 07 Mary Thomas, H & H Service ....,.. Ruth Raney, Marott Shoe ‘

Eva Dsupert, Marott Shoe Bea Davidson, Marot! Sito Gertrude Coombs, Blue Ribbon Ice Cr. Marie Zook, Marott 8hoe ............ 501 Alberta Parker, Marott Shoe

src nnany

sera nen

OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (WOMEN) Lillian Sanders, Indpls. Bleach'y Mixd & Eleanor Rhoads, Kirby Mortuary ..... Jessie Campbell, Ladies Independent . 488 Mary Jane Wilmoth. 8t. Philip No. 3. 4719 Evelyn Evans, Ft. Square Reen....... Donnas Hoppes, Allison Office Mixed .. Marguerite Kitzmiller, Riviera club... Betty Swarm, Mallory Junior Dorothy Rodman, Parm Sec. Adm. Bernice Hilardes, Triangle

Pitt-Cards Buy 3 Brooklyn Halfback *

PITTSBURGH, Oct. 25 (U. B). ~—With the hope of bolstering sagging pass defense, the combing Pittsburgh Steelers-Chicago-Card+ inals purchased 180-pound halfbaék Frank Martin from the Brooklyn Tigers on waivers today, 2 That the newcomer is suited fo the job can be attested by the { that in the Tigers’ opener with the Packers, he kept Don Hutson, passing whiz, well covered and to aid in holding the Green Bi boys to a 14-7 score. » Be Martin is also a capable baseball player, having performed with Nashville of the Southern associ tion last summer.

Toledo Rookie ‘Most Valuable'

ST. LOUIS, Oct. 25 (U. P= Boris (Babe) . Martin, outfieldep for the Toledo Mudhens, held the title of most valuable: player in the American associss tion bestowed on him by Sports ing News, baseball weekly. : Martin, playing his first year for the Mudhens, batted .350 114 games last season and

was voted the association's outs standing rookie. He is 23 years old and recently received a meds ical discharge from the navy.

tucks touchdown in the third period on an 8-yard plunge after the locals had staged a steady downfield march,

Western Michigan

Honors Civilian

KALAMAZOO, Mich., Oct. 25 (U. P.) —The Western Michigan college

Chicago, only civilian regular on the team, as honorary captain for 1944, Coach John Gill said today. Leahy, varsity guard for ’three |}

the army soon, Gill said.

of

inight, Adams said the trio would rejoin ture has been missing for several national days after ostensibly returning to | Saskatoon because of illness in his Ted Lindsay, Jud MecAtee and {family. Adams admitted he wasn't Steve Wochy hurriedly were sent counting on Couture to return.

Detroit

3 Detroit Rookies Loaned - i To Caps for Hershey Game :

DETROIT, Oct. 25 (U. P.).—Three as fill-ins when Indianapolis Detroit Red Wing rookies were in ager Johnny Sorrell ran into Hershey, Pa, today to play with power troubles. 5 the Wings' Indianapolis farm team| Meanwhile, the status of Detroif's football squad elected Dick Leahy, in the American hockey league to- | brightest rookie prospect remained but Wing Manager Jack!in doubt. Right Wing Gerald Cou-

for Sunday's eague opener against Boston,

f

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COUNTESS MARA NECK \ we

2

°

Countess Mara displays a high and obvious regard for correctness and good taste in this enimently fine neckwear. Patterns and col : ors are labeled with the distinction’ that : . unusual design. 5.00 to $15. :

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Magmag

AR FOR MEN

I hh SE

> : v